Technical Achievement Oscar Contenders at the Venice Film Festival – The Shape of Water, Downsizing, Victoria and Abdul

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Typically, it’s the stars who get all the attention when films screen at film festivals. They walk the red carpet, get all the media attention and pundits compete to appoint their favorite potential contenders. But there are equally deserving achievements in each of these films that usually go unnoticed – except for a few words here and there in some reviews – but they need to be highlights because just as these wonderful performances that leave us in awe on screen, the craft of making a film is part of the singular, unique experience that cinema offers unlike any other medium.

This Venice Film Festival has seen a number of standout technical achievements that are surely going to attract the attention of AMPAS’s technical branches.

Here’s a round-up of four achievements that merit attention and celebration (click image for a larger look):

Production Design: Paul D. Austerberry for The Shape of Water

The Shape of Water is more than just a period piece – it’s imaginative, bravura filmmaking that transports viewers. The production design on the film is simply astounding, particularly in what could have been just another apartment set. Elisa (Sally Hawkins)’s apartment is superbly designed to capture period detail and a dreamy mood. It is built on top of a beautifully designed old movie theatre where Elisa’s bathroom floor is right above the theatre’s main screening hall. The set design manages to be beautiful yet not overly showy. It is homey, elegant and also suitable to Elisa’s financial situation.

Production Design: Stefania Cella for Downsizing

Often as a production designer, you’re tasked with building large sets but Payne’s film requires the opposite – or more accurately, it shows the opposite. While the set designers on the film most likely worked on regular-sized sets, their work had to be still convincing when shrunk on screen. The small-sized world of Leisure Land was wonderfully portrayed on screen, with all its miniature elements. Even the trains, which regular-sized humans use in the film, had special compartments designed for small-sized residents. Uniquely designed, these compartments show us how these residents fit in the big world in very memorable ways.

Costume Design: Consolata Boyle for Victoria and Abdul

Period pieces are always Oscar-friendly particularly in the costume design category and Victoria and Abdul is no exception. The film boasts excellent costumes for both Queen Victoria and her Indian clerk Abdul. An excellent contrast takes place in the film between excessive and lavish costumes (for the Queen) and bright-colored Indian costumes which the film was smart to mention are not the correct cultural costumes of the time. The Abdul costumes had to be designed to appear exaggerated yet they had to be visually pleasing and create a nice visual balance against Victoria’s more reserved, dark-colored dresses. The result is perfect.

Cinematography: Dan Laustsen for The Shape of Water

The cinematography in Shape is an important part of the narrative. The film is full of dim lab moments, under-the-water master scenes, espionage-lit scenes and regular interior scenes. The image comes across as exquisite, beautiful and more importantly does not obstruct the viewer from following what happens on screen. Rather it draws us in to this emotional and arresting world, led by Hawkins’ performance and smart motion-capture for the film’s fantasy character.

Click on the links to see what the Gold Rush Gang thinks about the Oscar contenders in Cinematography, Production Design and Costume Design.

[author title=”Mina Takla” image=”http://i63.tinypic.com/33f730i.jpg”]Mina Takla is a foreign correspondent for AwardsWatch and the co-founder of The Syndicate, an online news agency that offers original content services to several film brands including Empire Magazine’s Middle East edition and the Dubai Film Festival. Takla has attended, covered and written from over 10 film festivals online including the Dubai International Film Festival, Abu Dhabi Film Festival, Cannes, Venice and Annecy Film Festivals. He been following the Oscar race since 2000 with accurate, office-pool winning predictions year after year. He writes monthly in Empire Arabia, the Arabic version of the world’s top cinema magazine and conducts press junkets with Hollywood stars in the UK and the US. He holds a Master’s degree in Strategic Marketing from Australia’s Wollongong University and is currently based in Dubai, UAE. [/author]

Erik Anderson

Erik Anderson is the founder/owner and Editor-in-Chief of AwardsWatch and has always loved all things Oscar, having watched the Academy Awards since he was in single digits; making lists, rankings and predictions throughout the show. This led him down the path to obsessing about awards. Much later, he found himself in film school and the film forums of GoldDerby, and then migrated over to the former Oscarwatch (now AwardsDaily), before breaking off to create AwardsWatch in 2013. He is a Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic, accredited by the Cannes Film Festival, Telluride Film Festival, Toronto International Film Festival and more, is a member of the International Cinephile Society (ICS), The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics (GALECA), Hollywood Critics Association (HCA) and the International Press Academy. Among his many achieved goals with AwardsWatch, he has given a platform to underrepresented writers and critics and supplied them with access to film festivals and the industry and calls the Bay Area his home where he lives with his husband and son.

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